Śreyas and Paramārtha: The Ribhu–Nidāgha Teaching on Non-Dual Self
Advaita
न मे क्षुधा भवेत्तॄप्तिः कस्मान्मां द्विज पृच्छति । वह्निना पार्थिवेनादौ दग्धे वै क्षुरापीश्वः ॥ ५२ ॥
na me kṣudhā bhavettṝptiḥ kasmānmāṃ dvija pṛcchati | vahninā pārthivenādau dagdhe vai kṣurāpīśvaḥ || 52 ||
我には飢えも満ち足りもない——ゆえに、二度生まれし者よ、なぜそれを我に問うのか。初めに地の身が火に焼かれたときも、主はまことに剃刀の刃のごとく鋭き至上の主権者として、あらゆる身体の状態を超えて在り続けた。
Sanatkumara (addressing Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It points to the liberated standpoint: hunger and satisfaction belong to the body, while the realized self (and the Lord as inner ruler) is untouched by such dualities.
By shifting attention from bodily conditions to the Lord’s transcendence, it supports bhakti as steady remembrance of Ishvara beyond pleasure–pain, hunger–satiety, and other changing states.
No specific Vedanga (like Vyakarana, Jyotisha, or Kalpa) is taught directly; the takeaway is a Moksha-Dharma principle: discern the non-self (body) from the self and remain established in the higher truth.